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Cogito

Cogito is a Latin term meaning "I think." In philosophy, it is most closely associated with René Descartes and the foundational role he assigns to thinking in the search for certain knowledge. Descartes uses methodological doubt to question all beliefs that could be subject to even the slightest uncertainty. The result is the famous cogito: "Cogito, ergo sum"—"I think, therefore I am." This proposition is presented as an indubitable first principle because the very act of doubting implies a thinking self.

The cogito leads to the notion of the mind as a thinking thing (res cogitans) distinct from

Historically, the cogito has been central to debates in epistemology and the theory of knowledge. It has

In contemporary discourse, the term cogito is often invoked as a paradigmatic example of first-person perspective

the
body,
which
underpins
Descartes'
view
of
Cartesian
dualism.
From
this
starting
point,
Descartes
attempts
to
reconstruct
knowledge
on
a
secure
foundation,
arguing
that
clear
and
distinct
perceptions
derived
from
the
thinking
mind
can
serve
as
the
basis
for
science
and
metaphysics.
shaped
rationalist
approaches
that
emphasize
self-evident
truths
while
provoking
critiques
from
empiricists
and
later
philosophers.
By
challenging
whether
certainty
can
be
achieved
through
external
senses
or
inherited
authorities,
the
cogito
also
influenced
subsequent
discussions
about
the
limits
of
human
knowledge
and
the
nature
of
the
self.
Kant,
for
example,
reexamined
the
scope
of
a
priori
knowledge
in
response
to
Cartesian
claims
about
grounded
certainty.
and
self-awareness
in
discussions
of
philosophy
of
mind
and
cognitive
science.
While
primarily
historical,
the
concept
continues
to
inform
debates
about
justification,
consciousness,
and
the
foundations
of
belief.